Acute exposure of white-tailed deer cortical bone to Staphylococcus aureus did not result in reduced bone stiffness

Author(s):  
Ariel Nicole Kunde ◽  
Victoria Jane Frost ◽  
Meir Max Barak
2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (9) ◽  
pp. 542-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Arnold ◽  
S. Zhao ◽  
S. Ma ◽  
F. Giuliani ◽  
U. Hansen ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Ilige S. Hage ◽  
Ré-Mi Hage ◽  
Charbel Y. Seif ◽  
Ramsey F. Hamade

It is widely recognized that bone mineral content is a main contributor to cortical bone stiffness. Previous works by the authors revealed that stiffness of mid-diaphysis cortical bone increases with increasing radial position from interior to exterior regions. In this work, we correlate this radial cortical stiffness to the chemical composition of several bone rings cut from 2-year old bovine cow femur (collected fresh from butcher). This mineralization is quantified using energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy. On each bone ring, five regions are assigned along a 4 mm radial line covering the entire cortical wall thickness. Locations along the radial distance are assigned to acquire the chemical analysis spectrum. Calcium (Ca) and Phosphorus (P) elements chemical elements are traced/detected. Measured mineralization results are expressed as per weight percent concentration (wt %). These elemental results for Calcium (Ca) and Phosphorus (P) are correlated to radial position and stiffness values using statistical analysis (SPSS®). Calcium (Ca) and Phosphorus (P) elements were positively correlated with stiffness values and radius whilst Ca/P ratio was almost constant with the radius. Findings suggest that with increasing radius, Ca (wt%) and P (wt %) showed a fairly increasing trend that correlates to increasing stiffness values proving that increased bone mineralization would contribute to cortical bone stiffness.


2017 ◽  
Vol 61 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Harika Vemula ◽  
Navid J. Ayon ◽  
Alloch Burton ◽  
William G. Gutheil

ABSTRACT Cytoplasmic peptidoglycan (PG) precursor levels were determined in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) after exposure to several cell wall-targeting antibiotics. Three experiments were performed: (i) exposure to 4× MIC levels (acute); (ii) exposure to sub-MIC levels (subacute); (iii) a time course experiment of the effect of vancomycin. In acute exposure experiments, fosfomycin increased UDP-GlcNAc, as expected, and resulted in substantially lower levels of total UDP-linked metabolite accumulation relative to other pathway inhibitors, indicating reduced entry into this pathway. Upstream inhibitors (fosfomycin, d-cycloserine, or d-boroalanine) reduced UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide levels by more than fourfold. Alanine branch inhibitors (d-cycloserine and d-boroalanine) reduced d-Ala–d-Ala levels only modestly (up to 4-fold) but increased UDP-MurNAc-tripeptide levels up to 3,000-fold. Downstream pathway inhibitors (vancomycin, bacitracin, moenomycin, and oxacillin) increased UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide levels up to 350-fold and UDP–MurNAc–l-Ala levels up to 80-fold, suggesting reduced MurD activity by downstream inhibitor action. Sub-MIC exposures demonstrated effects even at 1/8× MIC which strongly paralleled acute exposure changes. Time course data demonstrated that UDP-linked intermediate levels respond rapidly to vancomycin exposure, with several intermediates increasing three- to sixfold within minutes. UDP-linked intermediate level changes were also multiphasic, with some increasing, some decreasing, and some increasing and then decreasing. The total (summed) UDP-linked intermediate pool increased by 1,475 μM/min during the first 10 min after vancomycin exposure, providing a revised estimate of flux in this pathway during logarithmic growth. These observations outline the complexity of PG precursor response to antibiotic exposure in MRSA and indicate likely sites of regulation (entry and MurD).


1997 ◽  
Vol 87 (4) ◽  
pp. 153-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
GS Heard ◽  
LM Oloff ◽  
DA Wolfe ◽  
MD Little ◽  
DD Prins

A. rabbit model of Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis was used to compare 3 weeks of clindamycin-impregnated polymethylmethacralate (PMMA) bead treatment with 3 weeks of gentamicin-impregnated polymethylmethacralate bead treatment, 4 weeks of parenteral clindamycin treatment, and surgical debridement without any antibiotic treatment. The animals were weighed throughout the course of the experiment and cortical bone and marrow flush specimens were obtained for bacterial culture at the end of therapy. The cortical specimens were bacteria free in 100% (6/6) of the animals receiving parenteral clindamycin, 83% (5/6) of the animals in the clindamycin PMMA group and, none of the animals in the gentamicin PMMA group. The marrow flush specimens were bacteria free in 83% (5/6) of the animals in the parenteral clindamycin group, 67% (4/6) of the animals in the clindamycin PMMA group, and 40% (2/5) of the animals in the gentamicin PMMA group. While these findings are preliminary and further studies with larger numbers of animals are needed, the authors suggest that when PMMA bead therapy is being contemplated, serious consideration should be given to replacing gentamicin with clindamycin in treatment of gram-positive osteomyelitis. Furthermore, incorporation of clindamycin with gentamicin (or tobramycin) should be considered when treating mixed gram-positive and gram-negative osteomyelitis.


Ultrasonics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 80 ◽  
pp. 119-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Peralta ◽  
X. Cai ◽  
P. Laugier ◽  
Q. Grimal

PeerJ ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. e1575
Author(s):  
Vanessa R. Yingling ◽  
Kathryn A. Mitchell ◽  
Megan Lunny

Background.Osteoporosis is “a pediatric disease with geriatric consequences.” Bone morphology and tissue quality co-adapt during ontogeny for sufficient bone stiffness. Altered bone morphology from hypothalamic amenorrhea, a risk factor for low bone mass in women, may affect bone strength later in life. Our purpose was to determine if altered morphology following hypothalamic suppression during development affects cortical bone strength and trabecular bone volume (BV/TV) at maturity.Methods.Female rats (25 days old) were assigned to a control (C) group (n= 45) that received saline injections (.2 cc) or an experimental group (GnRH-a) (n= 45) that received gonadotropin releasing hormone antagonist injections (.24 mg per dose) for 25 days. Fifteen animals from each group were sacrificed immediately after the injection protocol at Day 50 (C, GnRH-a). The remaining animals recovered for 135 days and a subset of each group was sacrificed at Day 185 ((C-R) (n= 15) and (G-R) (n= 15)). The remaining animals had an ovariectomy surgery (OVX) at 185 days of age and were sacrificed 40 days later (C-OVX) (n= 15) and (G-OVX) (n= 15). After sacrifice femurs were mechanically tested and scanned using micro CT. Serum C-terminal telopeptides (CTX) and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) were measured. Two-way ANOVA (2 groups (GnRH-a and Control) X 3 time points (Injection Protocol, Recovery, post-OVX)) was computed.Results.GnRH-a injections suppressed uterine weights (72%) and increased CTX levels by 59%. Bone stiffness was greater in the GnRH-a groups compared to C. Ash content and cortical bone area were similar between groups at all time points. Polar moment of inertia, a measure of bone architecture, was 15% larger in the GnRH-a group and remained larger than C (19%) following recovery. Both the polar moment of inertia and cortical area increased linearly with the increases in body weight. Following the injection protocol, trabecular BV/TV was 31% lower in the GnRH-a group compared to C, a similar deficit in BV/TV was also measured following recovery and post-OVX. The trabecular number and thickness were lower in the GnRH-a group compared to control.Conclusion.These data suggest that following a transient delay in pubertal onset, trabecular bone volume was significantly lower and no restoration of bone volume occurred following recovery or post-OVX surgery. However, cortical bone strength was maintained through architectural adaptations in the cortical bone envelope. An increase in the polar moment of inertia offset increased bone resorption. The current data are the first to suppress trabecular bone during growth, and then add an OVX protocol at maturity. Trabecular bone and cortical bone differed in their response to hypothalamic suppression during development; trabecular bone was more sensitive to the negative effects of hypothalamic suppression.


1992 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. S4-S9 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Vailas ◽  
R. Vanderby ◽  
D. A. Martinez ◽  
R. B. Ashman ◽  
M. J. Ulm ◽  
...  

To determine whether mature humeral cortical bone would be modified significantly by an acute exposure to weightlessness, adult rats (110 days old) were subjected to 14 days of microgravity on the COSMOS 2044 biosatellite. There were no significant changes in peak force, stiffness, energy to failure, and displacement at failure in the flight rats compared with ground-based controls. Concentrations and contents of hydroxyproline, calcium, and mature stable hydroxylysylpyridinoline and lysylpyridinoline collagen cross-links remained unchanged after spaceflight. Bone lengths, cortical and endosteal areas, and regional thicknesses showed no significant differences between flight animals and ground controls. Our findings suggest that responsiveness of cortical bone to microgravity is less pronounced in adult rats than in previous spaceflight experiments in which young growing animals were used. We hypothesize that 14 days of spaceflight may not be sufficient to impact the biochemical and biomechanical properties of cortical bone in the mature rat skeleton.


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